The Winter Newsletter

🌦️The C.F. Dunn Winter Newsletter 🌦️
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These storms are relentless and our cliffs are feeling the brunt. Such is the prospect of finding ancient treasure here on the Jurassic coast that fossil hunters take their lives into their hands searching through the many rock falls. I can appreciate the lure as it is akin to looking for arrowheads, or Roman coins, or anything else that has remained hidden for any length of time.


There’s a heart-pounding adrenaline rush as you realise that you’re looking at something unseen for perhaps hundreds — or thousands — of years. It can be a similar feeling to discovering a line of research hitherto unexplored, a tenuous link to the past that might lead to a discovery that turns history on its head.


Remembering Richard III

We’ve just seen the anniversary of the announcement of the discovery of Richard III’s remains in 2013. Originating from Lincolnshire and areas rich in the history of the Wars of the Roses, I was brought up on stories about the Battle of Bosworth and the fate of Richard III. I never imagined that this king, whom I studied with an obsession from the age of nine, would one day be recovered in what proved to be a remarkable feat of historical sleuthing combined with extraordinary serendipity. That is the sort of eureka moment many historians dream of, but rarely experience. For as long as I am able, I will remember the news conference when the results of the DNA tests were revealed, and then the memorial service one cold March evening in 2015, sitting in Leicester Cathedral just a few feet away from Richard’s coffin, bathed in candlelight. Such moments are rare, but the hope of a chance discovery is what keeps historians and archaeologists hunting and me, writing.



The Tarnished Crown series update

Since the release of Degrees of Affinity last October, I’ve been working on the fourth book in The Tarnished Crown series, Legacy of Steel. The trouble is that Christmas came right in the middle of finishing the first draft. I couldn’t juggle both so had to take the bold step of putting aside the manuscript to concentrate upon the Yuletide celebrations. It’s a bit of a misnomer, however, because no writer I have ever met is truly able to put their project down. They carry it with them, tucked into the recesses of their mind wherever they go — singing carols, wrapping presents, dressing the tree. One year I was so immersed in the nether world of the fifteenth century that I forgot to put the sprouts on and the family went without. Oddly, nobody complained.


Edward IV


When in the midst of a writing project, I take my characters with me. Whether watching a film, going shopping or cleaning out the Chicken Ladies, my main characters are right there beside me. If gardening, I might consider what Isobel Fenton would make of tomatoes or wisteria, or what Edward IV might say about a political situation and how he would react. In a similar situation, I once took Emma D’Eresby out to buy a dress for a book launch and discovered that she hated shopping. Sounds daft? Perhaps, but in keeping my characters close, I get to know them better, the dialogue opening up new paths in the plot and deepening my understanding of how individuals might develop within the context of the story.  In short, my novel becomes part and parcel of my being until, that is, I move onto the next one.

George, Duke of Clarence


Talking of characters, in writing Legacy of Steel, I’ve spent a great deal of time considering the enigma of George, Duke of Clarence. The middle of the three surviving sons of Richard, Duke of York, George, must have caused many sleepless nights for his older brother, Edward IV. For his younger brother, Richard, Duke of Gloucester, George was both the sibling with whom, as a child, he shared a harrowing time abroad after their father’s violent death, and the brother who later threatened the integrity of the family. George is not an easy character to write — or to like — so finding an angle has been important. Sometimes it’s challenging to find an endearing quality in a person who seemed to be a troubled and troubling individual. The ‘false, fleeting, perjured Clarence’ of Shakespeare’s depiction is perhaps not so far from the truth; but George also had allies and ambition, and the combination, as Isobel and Robert discover, could be a dangerous mix.


I am now in the latter stages of the third edit of Legacy of Steel. When I get to the end I’ll go straight back to the beginning and start the fourth iteration. I will repeat this process until I can add or whittle no more, and then — taking a deep breath — I’ll attach it to an email to my editor and press send.


Thank you

LET THE READER’S VOICE HONOUR THE WRITER’S PEN - said a medieval scribe in a comment he wrote in the margins of the document he was writing. And where would we writers be without our readers? Thank you to all who have taken their valuable time to post reviews, rate my books or write to me.  I love hearing from you, so please get in touch using the contact form.


Degrees of Affinity reviews


‘This is a powerful third book in a powerful series. I await the next one with anticipation and some trepidation!’

(Paul Trembling, author)


‘This is the third book in this series and as with the other two, I couldn't put it down. They are really well written, drawing you into the lives and times of each of the characters.


Highly recommend this series. Best for holiday reads, otherwise the dishes won't get washed and no-one in the house will be fed. Enjoy!’


(Gardsuener on Amazon)




Spring is coming

In the meantime, and despite the weather, with snowdrops in abundance and buds aching to open, spring is ready to burst upon the scene. Whatever you have planned for the coming months, I hope that the joy of reading and a good dose of sunshine will be part of it.




Claire x



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Christmas Past – Present?